Musashi's Dokkodo (The Way of Walking Alone)
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dokkodo
Insurance Executive:
A woman came to the Buddha in great anguish, carrying her dead child pleading him to bring the little one back to life. The Buddha said, “Bring to me a mustard seed from any household where no-one has ever died and I will fulfill your wish.” The woman couldn’t find any household in which no one had ever died and it was then that she realized the universality of death. It’s often said the samurai were greatly feared on the battlefield because unlike most people, they didn’t fear death. They followed the soldier’s paradox: If you fear death, you will die. Might their courage have been fortified a little from alcohol? My husband and I have a large and colorful samurai figurine that depicts a warrior in kimono, holding a sword with one hand and in the other a large bowl. The bowl, if the figure were life sized, would have a diameter of 12 to 15 inches. An expert on samurai told us the bowl would hold an alcoholic beverage the warrior would consume before heading out to the battlefield. If I knocked back that much, even if it were Bud Light, I would no longer be afraid of spiders. The highly disciplined samurai valued their traditions, one of which was to drink sake together before they commenced to fight. It would be a time to imbibe and promise each other to either be victorious or die with honor and courage. The tradition was brought back during World War II by the kamikaze. They too would drink before diving their planes and themselves into American ships. After the samurai completed their battle, they drank again, but more so than before the battle. The kamikaze never got to enjoy that part of the custom. I’m in no way making light of the great samurai. Certainly, their courage is legend. I’m just pointing out that in many instances sake helped to calm the warriors’ nerves. Although Buddhism teaches much about death, it teaches more about living a life of peace, compassion, love for each other, and doing good. While living in this fashion certainly doesn’t make one want to hurry the inevitable, it does give the Buddhist, and for that matter the Christian, some modicum of comfort that there is something after death: Buddhists will be reincarnated and Christians will go to heaven. Musashi would have known this from the Buddhist perspective. Experts on the samurai believe they intuitively knew that fear causes the brain to shut down—the result of an accelerated heartbeat, shallow breathing, tunnel vision, and the exclusion of select sounds. The impact of this prevents the warrior from employing any fine- motor skills and having to rely only on broad and crude slashes with his sword. The samurai weren’t technically knowledgeable of these fine points but they surely must have experienced them in the early stages of their development. For this reason it was critical they went into battle with a firm grip on their fear of death. I fear death but I probably fear suffering before my death more. There is nothing I can do about this but accept the inevitable and have some degree of comfort with the acceptance. With this objective, I try, “try” being the significant word here, to accept that my life will end in an hour, tomorrow, or 20 years from now, and accept I might suffer in the process. If I can truly accept this reality, this impermanence—lots of people carry on as if they were going to be the one that death passes by—I believe it will help me to live the best life I can, be the best person I can be, and leave a positive footprint that indicates I was here and I helped smooth the path for others to do the same. Download 1.13 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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